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Young ants in the kitchen.


Holiday dinners can be a major affair. Someone has to cook the turkey, bake the potatoes, chop and steam the vegetables, stir the soup, mix ingredients for the pie, and more. Then, the chef has to sit down and wait until everyone is served before he or she can start eating.

Some ants go through a similar process of preparing food and patiently waiting to eat--but they do it all year round.

Tiny ants of the species Pheidole spadonia love to eat fruit flies (which are four times bigger than the ants). The grown-up grown-up  
adj.
1. Of, characteristic of, or intended for adults: grown-up movies; a grown-up discussion.

2.
 ants are as small as the head of a pin, and their waists are so petite that solid food can't pass through to their tummies.

The young ants (larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
), on the other hand, look like little snowmen that have fallen over on their backs. They do all the kitchen work. The larvae can't do much more than drool, but powerful chemicals in the liquid turn fruit-fly meat into a baby-food-like pile of moist protein slush slush  
n.
1. Partially melted snow or ice.

2. Soft mud; slop; mire.

3. Nautical Grease or fat discarded from a ship's galley.

4. A greasy compound used as a lubricant for machinery.
.

To find out exactly how the larvae prepare and serve dinner, scientists from Florida and Arizona took videos of Pheidole colonies. What they found was a complicated system of meal preparation and eating etiquette etiquette, name for the codes of rules governing social or diplomatic intercourse. These codes vary from the more or less flexible laws of social usage (differing according to local customs or taboos) to the rigid conventions of court and military circles, and they .

When the researchers left a fruit fly for the ants, the grownup workers dragged it into the nest. There, adult workers immediately pulled off and threw away the wings. They took off the head and legs and gave them to the larvae. Then, they divided the fly's body into chunks, which they placed in hairy 1. hairy - Annoyingly complicated. "DWIM is incredibly hairy."
2. hairy - Incomprehensible. "DWIM is incredibly hairy."
3. hairy - Of people, high-powered, authoritative, rare, expert, and/or incomprehensible.
 indents on top of the larvae's bellies.

For about 5 hours, the larvae oozed digestive juices Noun 1. digestive juice - secretions that aid digestion
digestive fluid

digestive system, gastrointestinal system, systema alimentarium, systema digestorium - the system that makes food absorbable into the body
 onto the meat, dissolving it into a slurpable meal. During the process, adults regularly checked on the stew, taking away liquid that was ready to eat and serving it to the group. Amazingly, the larvae almost never took a sip themselves until a grownup had collected all the stew. The larvae then took a gulp An unspecified number of bytes.  from the adult's mouth.

The researchers were able to confirm this by using food coloring to dye some of the fly chunks green. The larvae are almost see-through, so it was possible to see any green bits getting swallowed. It never happened. The larvae ate only from the mouths of adults.

The videos show that larvae play an important role in ant societies, long before they grow up to be working adults. And stewing stewing: see cooking.  meat on your stomach is a thankless job, indeed.--E. Sohn

http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20060104/Note3.asp From Science News for Kids Jan. 4, 2006. Copyright (c) 2006 Science Service. All rights reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Sohn, Emily
Publication:Science News for Kids
Date:Jan 4, 2006
Words:438
Previous Article:From mammoth to modern elephant.
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